Anne H. v. Michael B. CA1/1 , 1 Cal. App. 5th 488 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 6/15/16 Anne H. v. Michael B. CA1/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    ANNE H.,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                    A146610
    v.                                                                   (San Mateo County
    MICHAEL B.,                                                          Super. Ct. No. 120660)
    Defendant and Respondent.
    In August 2014, the family court entered a permanent custody order granting joint
    custody of L., the daughter of appellant Anne H. (Mother) and respondent Michael B.
    (Father). Under the order, Father, a Bay Area resident, was awarded physical custody of
    L. during school years, while Mother was awarded physical custody at her home in
    Virginia during the summers. In making the order, the family court stated that one of the
    primary considerations in granting Father custody during the school year was the
    presence of Mother’s family members in the Bay Area, which provided Mother a place to
    stay while visiting L. and allowed Mother’s family to share in L.’s care. The court’s
    order noted the relocation of Mother’s family members from the Bay Area, among
    several other factors, would be changed circumstances “requiring a new analysis of the
    ongoing custodial timeshare between the parties.”
    Less than a year later, Mother filed a request to modify the custody order, claiming
    her parents had relocated to Virginia and arguing, pursuant to the custody order, the
    relocation should be regarded as changed circumstances requiring a reexamination of L.’s
    best interests and a grant to Mother of school-year custody. The request was heard by a
    different judge than the judge who had entered the custody order. Without explanation,
    that judge denied Mother’s request to modify the custody order, finding no changed
    circumstances, and granted sanctions to Father under Family Code section 271 in the
    amount of $5,000.
    Upon Mother’s appeal of these rulings, we conclude the statement in the custody
    order specifying changed circumstances requiring a reconsideration of custody
    arrangements was not binding on subsequent judges. Finding no abuse of discretion in
    the second judge’s conclusion that Mother had failed to demonstrate changed
    circumstances, we affirm the denial of her request for modification. We also find no
    abuse of discretion in the court’s award of financial sanctions.
    I. BACKGROUND
    At the time of L.’s birth in 2009, Mother and Father were unmarried members of
    the armed services. Within a year after the birth, Father left the service, moved into
    Mother’s home in the Bay Area, where she was attending law school as a member of the
    military, and began attending graduate school himself. Father eventually finished school
    and found a job in the Bay Area. During this time, each parent spent occasional,
    relatively brief periods away from the home, leaving L. in the sole care of the other
    parent, assisted by members of Mother’s family, particularly her parents and sister. In
    August 2012, after completing law school, Mother was posted to Georgia. Mother and
    Father agreed that L. would remain with Father on a temporary basis, while they worked
    toward a more permanent custody arrangement.
    Father filed a petition in Santa Clara County Superior Court to gain full custody of
    L. in February 2013. Mother thereafter filed this paternity action in San Mateo County,
    and the parties stipulated to dismiss Father’s action. Eventually, following a three-day
    trial, Judge Richard DuBois issued a 20-page statement of decision (custody order) in
    August 2014, awarding the parents joint custody over L. and requiring her to spend the
    academic year with Father and the summer months with Mother. In reaching his
    decision, Judge DuBois found it significant that Mother’s parents and sister lived in the
    Bay Area, which provided Mother a place to stay during visits with L., allowed her more
    2
    “ ‘real time’ ” with L. during visits, and permitted her family members to participate in
    L.’s life while L. was living with Father. Unlike Mother in the Bay Area, Father had no
    friends or relatives in the places to which Mother was likely to be posted, making his
    visits comparatively more difficult and reducing the free time he could spend with L.
    during visits. The court noted that residence in the Bay Area also “would provide
    continued stability for” L., since it had always been her home and Father had a steady job
    and no plans to relocate, while Mother’s future was geographically uncertain, given her
    service. In the end, the court found the “most significant factor” in determining the
    custody arrangements to be the presence of Mother’s family members in the Bay Area.
    The court concluded: “Should these circumstances change by [Father] moving out of the
    Bay Area, or [Mother’s] family moving farther from the Bay Area, or [Mother’s] family
    not being allowed or able to have consistent independent contact with [L.], or [Mother]
    relocating to the Bay Area, such a change would constitute a change of circumstance
    requiring a new analysis of the ongoing custodial timeshare between the parties.” Neither
    party appealed the custody order.
    Less than a year later, in May 2015, Mother filed a request for modification of the
    custody order (request) to grant her physical custody of L. during the school year. In a
    declaration filed with the request, Mother stated that since entry of the custody order she
    had been given a posting in Washington, D.C. that would last for “at least the next 5–6
    years.” Prior to taking that assignment, Mother would be required to attend a 10-month
    training course in Charlottesville, Virginia.1 In addition, Mother stated her parents
    (grandparents), who had been closely involved in L.’s care prior to the custody dispute,
    had moved from the Bay Area to northern Virginia. According to Mother’s declaration,
    the grandparents had purchased a home in Virginia located “less than 15 minutes” from
    her own Virginia home. Attached to the declaration was a grant deed of a parcel of
    1
    This aspect of Mother’s application did not constitute wholly changed
    circumstances. Judge DuBois’s order anticipated that Mother would spend nearly a year
    in Charlottesville before assuming a more permanent post. While settling in Washington,
    D.C. was a possibility at that time, there were other options, including a foreign post.
    3
    Virginia real estate to the grandparents and Mother’s brother. Mother characterized the
    grandparents’ relocation as “a prima facie change in circumstances” under the custody
    order and sought a reevaluation of L.’s best interests.
    Mother also contended Father had failed to cooperate with the grandparents in
    allowing them access to L. in the Bay Area, but she provided no evidentiary support for
    the claim, other than her conclusory statement, “Despite repeated requests to resume [the
    grandparents’] independent visits with [L.] when she is in California, [Father] has
    consistently declined with excuses, or required them to spend time with her in his
    presence,” but she provided no support for the claim. The only documentary evidence
    submitted in support of this claim did not, in fact, support it, and the portion of her
    declaration detailing Father’s lack of cooperation focused entirely on his relations with
    Mother and contained no information suggesting Father had prevented the grandparents
    from spending time with L.2
    Father opposed the request. In a declaration, he argued no significant change of
    circumstances had occurred because the grandparents retained ownership of their home in
    the Bay Area, Mother’s sister continued to live in the Bay Area, and Mother “has other
    relatives living in [the Bay Area] with whom she stays during her visitation with [L.].”
    Further, according to Father, the grandparents had chosen to limit their contact with L.,
    failing to visit with her for months despite his open invitation to do so. Father also
    2
    In support of her claim of lack of cooperation with the grandparents, Mother
    submitted a printout of a chain of e-mails dating from the end of September 2014. The
    chain began with Father politely declining a request by the maternal grandmother to see
    L. the following weekend, saying he already made plans, but he offered to make L.
    available the following month and asked for dates when the grandparents would be free.
    In responding, the grandmother reiterated her request for the weekend without
    mentioning October or otherwise acknowledging the substance of Father’s e-mail. Father
    again politely declined and asked for October dates. When Friday arrived, the
    grandmother sent a third e-mail repeating her request for the weekend without
    mentioning October. This time, Father offered to make L. available that afternoon but
    repeated he had plans for the remainder of the weekend and again offered time in
    October. To the extent this e-mail chain demonstrates a lack of cooperation, it rests with
    the grandmother.
    4
    challenged the genuineness of the grandparents’ relocation, pointing out that Mother had
    listed the Virginia home deeded to the grandparents as her own home in a school
    application, and L. had stayed with the grandparents in their Bay Area home “[a]s
    recently as June 2015.”3 Father claimed he continued to have only limited opportunities
    to visit L. when she was in Mother’s custody, since he was allowed only 12 days annually
    of vacation and had no place to stay in Virginia, while Mother’s posting permitted much
    more opportunity for west coast visits. Her job permitted flexibility of scheduling; she
    had substantial banked leave time; and she acquired 30 additional days of leave per year.
    Since the custody order went into effect, Mother had been able to spend two four-day
    weekends per month visiting L. Further, Father argued, Mother would be required either
    to move L. to Charlottesville for the duration of the 10-month training course or commute
    over two hours each way, making it difficult for her to care for L. during that time.
    Father’s opposition also requested attorney fees in the amount of $15,867.50 as a
    sanction under Family Code section 271. His declaration reiterated the procedural
    history of the proceedings, noting Mother had filed five ex parte applications regarding
    custody and visitation during the period 2013 to 2014, in addition to the request, while he
    had filed no pleadings seeking relief other than the initial petition. In ruling on the last of
    Mother’s ex parte applications in December 2014, Judge Susan Greenberg had
    commented with respect to the parties’ squabbling: “It’s a nightmare. I’m hoping that
    the parenting coordinator can resolve that for you because frankly, you guys are adults
    and you can deal with the stress. But this little girl is going to have a horrible time if you
    continue to act this way and treat each other this way.” At the time, Judge Greenberg
    denied without prejudice motions for section 271 sanctions Father had filed, noting: “I
    don’t believe that they should be ruled on now. I want the parties to . . . use the parenting
    coordinator to try and resolve their constant and continuous fighting and bickering over
    every single aspect of the timeshare with this little girl.”
    3
    According to Father, Mother enrolled L. in a Virginia kindergarten program
    without consulting him, in violation of the custody order. In the enrollment application,
    she listed the home deeded to the grandparents as her own home.
    5
    Father’s opposition renewed the earlier sanctions motion. As he argued, Mother
    was an attorney, and therefore able to assist in the preparation of litigation documents,
    while he was required to rely on counsel with respect to the proceedings. He concluded,
    “[Mother’s] refusal to accept the Court’s custody orders and incessant efforts to change
    the Order have exhausted me not only financially, but physically and emotionally as
    well.” Father argued Mother had the ability to pay the requested sanctions because she is
    employed as a judge advocate and had the resources to fund the three-day custody trial
    and four motions to modify the custody order in the preceding year. The requested award
    of $15,867.50 was based primarily on the attorney fees Father incurred in responding to
    the request.
    In a reply declaration, Mother stated that although her sister remained in the Bay
    Area, the sister lived in a small apartment with her husband, making it difficult for her to
    support Mother’s visits with L. Mother claimed to have no other relatives or friends in
    the Bay Area on whom she could rely for “logistical support” in visitation. Mother said
    she owned her own home in Virginia “approximately 20–30 minutes” from her parents’
    home and explained her parents leased their house in the Bay Area to college students
    during the academic year. Addressing Father’s request for sanctions, Mother denied that
    she had superior financial means. According to Mother, Father’s parents had financed
    his side of the custody litigation, while Mother had to finance her representation from her
    own pocket. Mother contended she had attempted to be conciliatory, but Father’s
    “hostile and unreasonable behavior” had forced her to seek judicial relief.
    At the hearing on the request, conducted by Judge Greenberg, Mother’s attorney
    stated he had brought with him additional evidence to support the claim that the
    grandparents had moved, including “their utility bills and the lease of their [Bay Area]
    home.” Those documents were never offered into evidence, however, and they are not in
    the appellate record. Counsel for Father argued no move had, in fact, occurred, pointing
    out that the grandparents had not submitted their own declarations with respect to the
    claim. Following argument, Judge Greenberg denied the request, stating without further
    explanation: “. . . I find that [Mother] has not met that burden to show the change of
    6
    circumstances.” The judge also awarded $5,000 in sanctions, again without explanation.
    Her oral ruling was reflected in a subsequent written order.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Mother has appealed Judge Greenberg’s denial of the request and grant of
    sanctions, contending primarily that the denial was inconsistent with the custody order,
    which noted that a relocation of Mother’s family members would constitute changed
    circumstances requiring a reconsideration of the custody arrangements.4
    A. Mother’s Demonstration of Changed Circumstances
    Although Family Code section 3087 states that an order of joint custody may be
    modified merely upon a showing that the best interest of the child requires the
    modification, the Supreme Court has imposed an additional requirement when, as here, a
    permanent custody order has been entered. “Once the trial court has entered a final or
    permanent custody order reflecting that a particular custodial arrangement is in the best
    interest of the child, ‘the paramount need for continuity and stability in custody
    arrangements—and the harm that may result from disruption of established patterns of
    care and emotional bonds with the primary caretaker—weigh heavily in favor of
    maintaining’ that custody arrangement. [Citation.] In recognition of this policy concern,
    we have articulated a variation on the best interest standard, known as the changed
    circumstance rule, that the trial court must apply when a parent seeks modification of a
    final judicial custody determination. [Citation.] Under the changed circumstance rule,
    custody modification is appropriate only if the parent seeking modification demonstrates
    ‘a significant change of circumstances’ indicating that a different custody arrangement
    would be in the child’s best interest. [Citation.] Not only does this serve to protect the
    weighty interest in stable custody arrangements, but it also fosters judicial economy.’ ”
    (In re Marriage of Brown & Yana (2006) 
    37 Cal. 4th 947
    , 956 (Brown).) The burden of
    4
    Mother had earlier filed a petition for writ of mandate challenging the family
    court’s order, docketed as case No. A146235. This court summarily denied the petition
    in an order dated October 22, 2015. The parties have relied on exhibits submitted with
    Mother’s writ petition as the primary record in this appeal.
    7
    showing changed circumstances is on the party seeking a modification of the custody
    order. (Christina L. v. Chauncey B. (2014) 
    229 Cal. App. 4th 731
    , 738.)
    1. Significance of Judge DuBois’s Statement Regarding Changed
    Circumstances
    Mother argues Judge Greenberg’s finding of no changed circumstances must be
    reversed because it is inconsistent with Judge DuBois’s conclusion in the custody order
    that changed circumstances would result if Mother’s family members moved from the
    Bay Area. The first issue to be resolved is therefore the degree to which Judge DuBois’s
    comment regarding potential changed circumstances controlled Judge Greenberg’s
    consideration of the request. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude the comment
    was not binding in any manner on Judge Greenberg in her determination of changed
    circumstances.
    Mother first argues the comment became preclusive under the doctrines of res
    judicata and collateral estoppel when Father did not appeal the custody order. The issue
    of res judicata is conclusively resolved by In re Marriage of Rabkin (1986)
    
    179 Cal. App. 3d 1071
    (Rabkin). In ruling on a motion for modification of a spousal
    support order, the family court in Rabkin granted the wife a temporary increase in spousal
    support when she had difficulty selling the family home, a modification specifically
    permitted by the couple’s marital settlement agreement (MSA). (Id. at pp. 1076–1077.)
    Although the MSA expressly stated sale of the couple’s home would not constitute a
    change in circumstances justifying a further motion to modify the spousal support order,
    the family court’s order granting the temporary increase stated just the opposite, that sale
    of the residence would be deemed a change in circumstances entitling either party to seek
    modification of the support order. (Id. at p. 1077.) After the house was sold, the family
    court entered a new order in which it set spousal support below that provided in the
    MSA. The wife appealed, contending the family court was precluded from modifying
    her support on the basis of the sale of the home by the language of the MSA. (Id. at
    p. 1078.) The husband contended, in part, that the wife was precluded from arguing sale
    of the home could not constitute a change in circumstances by the doctrine of res
    8
    judicata, since she did not appeal the contrary language in the court’s modification order.
    (Id. at p. 1082.) In rejecting the application of res judicata, the court noted that the
    doctrine only applies to issues actually before the court and necessarily decided. (Ibid.)
    As the court explained, the sole issue before the family court at the time of the original
    modification hearing was whether the wife was entitled to a temporary increase in
    spousal support under the MSA. This issue, the court held, “had nothing to do with the
    question of whether the sale of the residence would constitute a change of circumstances
    for the purpose of further spousal support proceedings. . . . Thus, the statement . . .
    characterizing the sale of the marital residence as a change of circumstances justifying a
    future modification of spousal support was unnecessary to the court’s decision and purely
    gratuitous.” (Id. at p. 1083.)
    Rabkin is directly on point. The only issue before Judge DuBois in the original
    hearing was current custody arrangements for L. Necessarily, the issue of the
    circumstances justifying a change in those arrangements was not before Judge DuBois
    when he entered the custody order. On the contrary, modification of the custody order
    due to changed circumstances would not be before a court unless and until Mother or
    Father filed an appropriate motion to modify. Further, the issue of changed
    circumstances could not even arise until there had been sufficient time after entry of the
    custody order for circumstances to change. Accordingly, Judge DuBois’s comments
    about a change in circumstances were unnecessary to his decision and, pursuant to
    Rabkin, had no preclusive effect under the doctrine of res judicata.5
    The doctrine of collateral estoppel is inapplicable for essentially the same reason.
    Collateral estoppel, also known as issue preclusion, “prevents relitigation of previously
    decided issues. . . . [I]ssue preclusion applies (1) after final adjudication (2) of an
    identical issue (3) actually litigated and necessarily decided in the first suit and
    (4) asserted against one who was a party in the first suit or one in privity with that party.”
    5
    Mother merely distinguishes Rabkin by arguing that the circumstances relating to
    modification of the custody order were different, without acknowledging or addressing
    the decision’s ruling with respect to res judicata.
    9
    (DKN Holdings LLC v. Faerber (2015) 
    61 Cal. 4th 813
    , 824–825.) An issue is
    “ ‘necessarily decided’ ” by an order if the issue was not “ ‘entirely unnecessary’ to the
    judgment in the initial proceeding.” (Lucido v. Superior Court (1990) 
    51 Cal. 3d 335
    ,
    342; see Mega RV Corp. v. HWH Corp. (2014) 
    225 Cal. App. 4th 1318
    , 1344.) For the
    reasons discussed above, Judge DuBois’s comments about changed circumstances were
    “entirely unnecessary” to his resolution of the initial custody arrangements, and for that
    reason those comments have no collateral estoppel effect.
    Mother argues that even if the comments had no preclusive effect, Judge
    Greenberg was not permitted to enter a ruling inconsistent with Judge DuBois’s order
    because “one trial court judge may not reconsider and overrule a ruling of another judge.”
    (Curtin v. Koskey (1991) 
    231 Cal. App. 3d 873
    , 876.) As this principle is explained in In
    re Alberto (2002) 
    102 Cal. App. 4th 421
    , an individual trial judge generally has the
    authority to reconsider and change his or her own interim rulings. “Different policy
    considerations, however, are operative if the reconsideration is accomplished by a
    different judge. Accordingly, the general rule is just the opposite: the power of one
    judge to vacate an order made by another judge is limited. [Citation.] This principle is
    founded on the inherent difference between a judge and a court and is designed to ensure
    the orderly administration of justice. ‘If the rule were otherwise, it would be only a
    matter of days until we would have a rule of man rather than a rule of law. To affirm the
    action taken in this case would lead directly to forum shopping, since if one judge should
    deny relief, defendants would try another and another judge until finally they found one
    who would grant what they were seeking. Such a procedure would instantly breed lack
    of confidence in the integrity of the courts.’ ” (Id. at p. 427.)
    While we acknowledge the general principle, we conclude that Judge DuBois’s
    comments on the issue of changed circumstances do not constitute the type of “ruling”
    that cannot be altered by a subsequent trial judge.6 In deciding the binding scope of
    6
    The general principle is subject to various subtleties and qualifications. (See,
    e.g., In re Marriage of Oliverez (2015) 
    238 Cal. App. 4th 1242
    , 1247–1249.) For purposes
    10
    Judge DuBois’s ruling, a useful analogy can be made to the law of the case doctrine.
    Under that doctrine, “ ‘ “where, upon an appeal, the [reviewing] court, in deciding the
    appeal, states in its opinion a principle or rule of law necessary to the decision, that
    principle or rule becomes the law of the case and must be adhered to throughout its
    subsequent progress, both in the lower court and upon subsequent appeal and . . . in any
    subsequent suit for the same cause of action, and this [is true] although in its subsequent
    consideration this court may be clearly of the opinion that the former decision is
    erroneous in that particular.” ’ ” (People v. Murtishaw (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 574
    , 589.) As
    suggested in Murtishaw, the binding effect of a prior appellate decision under the law of
    the case doctrine is limited to issues necessary to the disposition of the appeal. “The
    discussion or determination of a point not necessary to the disposition of a question that
    is decisive of the appeal is generally regarded as obiter dictum and not as the law of the
    case.” (Stockton Theatres, Inc. v. Palermo (1956) 
    47 Cal. 2d 469
    , 474; see People v.
    Bryant, Smith and Wheeler (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 335
    , 374, fn. 6 [law of the case applies to
    rules of law “ ‘necessary to the decision’ ”].)
    The law of the case doctrine is not directly applicable to Judge DuBois’s ruling,
    since the doctrine applies only to matters decided by an appellate court. (People v.
    Parker (2014) 
    231 Cal. App. 4th 1423
    , 1434, fn. 2; Harbor Islands Holdings v. Kim
    (2003) 
    107 Cal. App. 4th 790
    , 795.) Yet it stands to reason that a trial judge’s ruling
    should have no greater binding effect on subsequent judges in the same case than a
    comparable ruling by an appellate court. As noted above, under the law of the case
    doctrine, a prior appellate ruling is binding only as to issues necessary to the court’s
    decision. “Incidental statements or conclusions not necessary to the decision are not to
    be regarded as authority.” (Simmons v. Superior Court (1959) 
    52 Cal. 2d 373
    , 378.) By
    the same logic, a trial court ruling is binding on subsequent judges only as to those
    aspects of the ruling necessary to decision on the matter before the initial judge. Judge
    of this appeal, it is necessary for us only to accept that a ruling of one trial judge in a case
    cannot be overturned by a different trial judge.
    11
    DuBois’s ruling decided a petition for a custody determination. For the reasons discussed
    above, the issue of changed circumstances was wholly unnecessary to such a decision.
    Accordingly, Judge DuBois’s comments about changed circumstances were not binding
    on subsequent judges. Any later decision by Judge Greenberg that might be inconsistent
    with those comments did not violate the rule prohibiting a trial judge from reconsidering
    and overruling an earlier ruling by a different trial judge in the same case.
    There are strong policy reasons to limit the binding effect of Judge DuBois’s
    ruling in this manner. In general terms, any other rule would bestow inappropriate
    authority on the first trial judge on the scene. While it is entirely appropriate to preclude
    later trial judges from reconsidering an earlier judge’s ruling on issues properly presented
    for decision, there is no reason to require subsequent judges to adhere to an earlier
    judge’s expression of views on issues that were not actually before him or her. Such a
    rule would grant arbitrary and unnecessary authority to judicial musings, as opposed to
    judicial decisions. As applicable specifically to custody rulings, there are two additional
    factors. First, the issue of changed circumstances necessarily must be considered in light
    of all circumstances prevailing at the time of a request to modify the order. To isolate
    particular circumstances and declare them determinative, as Judge DuBois did, fails to do
    justice to the doctrine. Further, there is no way for a family court judge to know in
    advance whether any particular circumstance deemed important at the time a custody
    order is entered will remain critical, in light of other changing circumstances over time.
    Under Mother’s argument, Judge DuBois’s comments would have remained binding for
    years, notwithstanding the growth of L. and the changing nature of living arrangements
    and relationships among her family members. Second, there was no effective appellate
    review available for Judge DuBois’s comments regarding changed circumstances.
    Because those views had no immediate legal or practical effect, it would be unfair, as
    well as inefficient, to require a party to seek appellate review merely to prevent their
    application in later proceedings. In addition, because the comments had nothing to do
    with the issues involved in the custody decision, it is not clear that judicial review would
    have been available even if an appeal had been taken. Just as the comments constituted
    12
    an advisory ruling when they were written by Judge DuBois, any appellate consideration
    of the comments would be advisory in the same way. (See, e.g., County of San Diego v.
    State of California (1997) 
    15 Cal. 4th 68
    , 110 [declining to give an advisory ruling].) For
    all these reasons, it would be inadvisable to permit a family court judge to render a
    binding ruling with respect to changed circumstances prior to their occurrence.
    2. Judge Greenberg’s Finding of No Changed Circumstances
    We review a ruling on a request for modification of a custody order for abuse of
    discretion. (F.T. v. L.J. (2011) 
    194 Cal. App. 4th 1
    , 14.) “Generally, a trial court abuses
    its discretion if there is no reasonable basis on which the court could conclude its
    decision advanced the best interests of the child. [Citation.] ‘Under this test, we must
    uphold the trial court “ruling if it is correct on any basis, regardless of whether such basis
    was actually invoked.” ’ ” (Chalmers v. Hirschkop (2013) 
    213 Cal. App. 4th 289
    , 299.)7
    Judge Greenberg did not abuse her discretion in concluding Mother had failed to
    demonstrate “ ‘a significant change of circumstances’ indicating that a different custody
    arrangement would be in [L.’s] best interest.” 
    (Brown, supra
    , 37 Cal.4th at p. 956.)
    First, there was substantial evidence to support a finding that the grandparents had not
    genuinely relocated. Oddly, the grandparents did not submit their own declarations
    acknowledging and explaining their purported move. While it seems clear the
    grandparents (with their son) acquired a home in Virginia, that home was claimed by
    Mother as her own residence in the school application. Mother provided the court with
    no address for her own home and described it inconsistently in different declarations as
    less than 15 minutes from the grandparents’ home and as 20–30 minutes from their home.
    7
    Father contends we should also apply the doctrine of implied findings because
    Mother failed to request a statement of decision. (See Shaw v. County of Santa Cruz
    (2008) 
    170 Cal. App. 4th 229
    , 267 [explaining doctrine].) A statement of decision,
    however, is ordinarily available only after trial, not in connection with a ruling on a
    motion or special proceeding (In re Marriage of Fong (2011) 
    193 Cal. App. 4th 278
    , 294–
    296), and Father cites no legal authority suggesting a statement of decision was available
    in connection with a motion to modify an existing custody order. In any event, we find it
    unnecessary to invoke the doctrine of implied findings to affirm Judge Greenberg’s
    orders.
    13
    Further, the grandparents continued to own their Bay Area home and were apparently
    living there at a time after Mother filed the request, since they had received L. there.8 All
    of these factors provide substantial evidence to support a finding the grandparents had not
    actually changed their residence.
    Second, even assuming the grandparents had relocated, Judge Greenberg would
    not have abused her discretion in concluding that their relocation, viewed in light of all
    circumstances, did not constitute substantial changed circumstances requiring a
    reconsideration of L.’s best interests. Because the two parents continued to be widely
    geographically separated, the school year/summer split of custody arrived at by Judge
    DuBois remained the most appropriate solution. Yet nothing in the change of
    circumstances claimed by Mother caused school year custody with her, rather than
    Father, to be a clearly preferable situation in furthering L.’s best interests. After the
    relocation, Mother continued to have family members available in the Bay Area to assist
    her visitation there, while Father had no comparable family or friends in Virginia. In
    addition, Mother’s job in the service continued to offer considerably more opportunity for
    visits than Father’s limited vacation time at his work. Further, the need for Mother to
    attend an extended training program meant she would either have to move away from the
    grandparents or undertake a difficult commute, essentially undercutting any benefit from
    the requested change. In addition, removing L. from the Bay Area for most of the year
    would take her away from the place that had been her lifetime home. For that reason, the
    family court could readily have concluded “ ‘the paramount need for continuity and
    stability in custody arrangements—and the harm that may result from disruption of
    established patterns of care and emotional bonds with the primary caretaker’ ” were not
    outweighed by the claimed change in circumstances. 
    (Brown, supra
    , 37 Cal.4th at
    p. 956.)
    8
    While Mother’s attorney claimed at the hearing to have a lease of the Bay Area
    home and Virginia utility bills, these were never provided to the court or offered in
    evidence, and they are not contained in the appellate record. We therefore cannot
    consider them.
    14
    Mother argues Judge Greenberg abused her discretion because the grandparents
    were deeply involved in L.’s life and “[L.]’s proximity to her maternal grandparents was
    a pivotal factor in the custody decision.” An examination of the custody order, however,
    demonstrates it was the presence of both the grandparents and Mother’s sister in the Bay
    Area that was important in the resolution of custody, and their presence was important
    not only because of the role played by those family members in L.’s life but also because
    Mother could stay with them when visiting with L. in California. Following the
    grandparents’ relocation, as discussed above, Mother continued to have some family in
    the Bay Area. In any event, Judge Greenberg did not abuse her discretion in concluding
    that the grandparents’ role in L.’s life was not so important that their voluntary decision
    to move away from the Bay Area required an adjustment in custody arrangements.
    B. Sanctions
    The purpose of Family Code section 271 is to promote settlement and to
    encourage cooperation to reduce the cost of litigation. (Parker v. Harbert (2012)
    
    212 Cal. App. 4th 1172
    , 1176.) “ ‘Litigants who flout that policy by engaging in conduct
    that increases litigation costs are subject to imposition of attorney fees and costs as a
    section 271 sanction.’ ” (In re E.M. (2014) 
    228 Cal. App. 4th 828
    , 850 (E.M.).) “It has
    been said that section 271 . . . imposes a ‘minimum level of professionalism and
    cooperation,’ to effect the policy favoring settlement of family law litigation—and a
    reduction of the attendant costs.” (In re Marriage of Davenport (2011) 
    194 Cal. App. 4th 1
    507, 1524.) A party seeking sanctions under section 271 need not demonstrate the
    opposing party’s conduct was “frivolous or taken solely for the purpose of delay. Rather,
    the statute is aimed at conduct that frustrates settlement of family law litigation.
    Expressed another way, section 271 vests family law courts with an additional means
    with which to enforce this state’s public policy of promoting settlement of family law
    litigation, while reducing its costs through mutual cooperation of clients and their
    counsel.” (In re Marriage of Tharp (2010) 
    188 Cal. App. 4th 1295
    , 1318.) The party
    seeking sanctions need not demonstrate actual injury (E.M., at p. 850) or a correlation
    between sanctioned conduct and specific attorney fees (In re Marriage of Falcone &
    15
    Fyke (2012) 
    203 Cal. App. 4th 964
    , 990). “The only stricture is that the sanction may not
    impose an unreasonable financial burden on the party sanctioned.” (Ibid.)
    The imposition of sanctions under Family Code section 271 is committed to the
    sound discretion of the trial court. 
    (E.M., supra
    , 228 Cal.App.4th at p. 850.) Sanction
    orders under section 271 are reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard. (In re
    Marriage of Smith (2015) 
    242 Cal. App. 4th 529
    , 532.) “Accordingly, we will overturn
    such an order only if, considering all of the evidence viewed most favorably in its support
    and indulging all reasonable inferences in its favor, no judge could reasonably make the
    order.” (In re Marriage of Corona (2009) 
    172 Cal. App. 4th 1205
    , 1225–1226 (Corona).)
    When the family court fails to state the grounds for a sanction award, “we may affirm the
    court’s sanctions order on any ground supported by the record.” (Id. at p. 1225.) “ ‘The
    rationale for this principle is twofold: (a) an appellate court reviews the action of the
    lower court and not the reasons given for its action; and (b) there can be no prejudicial
    error from erroneous logic or reasoning if the decision itself is correct.’ ” (In re
    Marriage of Mathews (2005) 
    133 Cal. App. 4th 624
    , 632.)
    Applying the requisite deferential standard of review, we cannot say that the trial
    court’s sanctions order was unreasonable. The request was filed against the background
    of other purportedly litigious conduct by Mother. While we do not attempt to evaluate
    Mother’s prior ex parte requests for judicial intervention, Judge Greenberg had presided
    over those filed after entry of the custody order. She was therefore generally aware of the
    nature of the parties’ litigation conduct. With respect to the request, Judge Greenberg, as
    discussed above, could have viewed it as not filed in good faith because the grandparents’
    move was not genuine. That conclusion alone would support the order of Family Code
    section 271 sanctions. Even if the judge accepted Mother’s factual claims, there was no
    question Mother was attempting to overturn a permanent custody order less than a year
    after its entry, before the parties had any meaningful opportunity to implement it.
    Further, the request was made on the pretense of a change in circumstances that could be
    viewed as having little material relationship to the reasoning underlying Judge DuBois’s
    custody order. Rather, Mother could have been viewed as attempting to take advantage
    16
    of a single comment in Judge DuBois’s order—his reference to a relocation of Mother’s
    family members, among several other possible changes in circumstances—to overturn a
    custody ruling with which she was dissatisfied. Because such conduct frustrates
    settlement and cooperation and drives up litigation costs, it justified the imposition of a
    sanction under section 271.
    Mother argues her request could not have been viewed as frustrating settlement
    and cooperation because she was merely conforming to Judge DuBois’s comments
    regarding changed circumstances. As noted above, however, Judge Greenberg could
    have concluded the grandparents’ claimed relocation was not genuine. Even if that was
    not the case, the judge could have viewed Mother’s request, which was filed less than a
    year after entry of the custody order, as an attempt to overturn the order, rather than a
    good faith attempt to implement the spirit of Judge DuBois’s ruling.
    Mother also contends Father failed to demonstrate that imposition of the relatively
    modest sanctions would not be an unreasonable financial burden. Father demonstrated,
    however, that Mother had reasonably remunerative professional employment and had
    been able to finance substantial, undoubtedly expensive litigation over the prior two
    years. This was sufficient to permit the family court to infer that an additional $5,000
    sanction would not be an unreasonable financial burden. If Mother wished to challenge
    her ability to pay the sanction, she could have submitted her own current income and
    expense declaration 
    (Corona, supra
    , 172 Cal.App.4th at p. 1227), but she did not do so.
    III. DISPOSITION
    The family court’s orders are affirmed. Father may recover his costs on appeal.
    (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1), (2).)
    17
    _________________________
    Margulies, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Humes, P.J.
    _________________________
    Dondero, J.
    A146610
    18
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A146610

Citation Numbers: 1 Cal. App. 5th 488

Filed Date: 6/15/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023